During Nvidia's GTC 2026 keynote in San Jose, CEO Jensen Huang partnered with Disney to unveil a robotic Olaf from Frozen, powered by Nvidia GPUs and the Newton Physics Engine. The snowman droid features advanced simulations, Disney animator-trained movements, and will debut at Disneyland Paris on March 29. This highlight joins other announcements like NemoClaw and Vera upgrades in the GTC series.
Nvidia's GTC 2026 keynote on March 16 at the SAP Center in San Jose featured CEO Jensen Huang's nearly three-hour presentation on AI advancements, including hardware, agentic AI infrastructure like Vera Rubin, and robotics. A memorable highlight was the collaboration with Disney, bringing Frozen's Olaf to life as a fully functional robot that joined Huang onstage.
The Olaf droid leverages Nvidia GPUs for high-performance simulations via the open-source Newton Physics Engine, developed by Nvidia, Google DeepMind, and Disney Research. Walt Disney Studios animators supplied training data to replicate Olaf's iconic shuffle and mannerisms. Its design includes iridescent fibers mimicking snow and magnetically attached, interchangeable body parts for durability and maintenance.
Disney executive R&D Imagineer Josh Gorin stated, 'We had our sights set on creating a real-life Olaf for a long time. Technology finally caught up.' The robot will debut on March 29, 2026, in the World of Frozen land at Disneyland Paris, with plans for Hong Kong Disneyland afterward. No U.S. park timeline was announced.
This robotics showcase complements GTC's major reveals, such as NemoClaw for OpenClaw AI agents, DLSS 5 graphics tech, Vera CPU, and Vera Rubin Space-1, covered in related GTC 2026 articles. Notably absent were rumored N1 and N1X chips.